This Friday (December 2nd) dollop are back at Stealth with an unbelievable lineup. Alongside the likes of James Blake, Boddika, Dark Sky, Benji B & Eliphino - they also have a special back-to-back set from ONEMAN & JACKMASTER, which will be hosted by Boiler Room/Standard Place's resident MC, ASBO.

Individually they are regarded as two of the most technically gifted DJs in the game, and we were lucky enough to witness their set at the Major Lazer Notting Hill Carnival Party this summer - and boy, was it special!

Jack ‘Jackmaster’ Revill has been surging ahead on a wave of elastic alien syncopations for time. A member of Glasgow’s legendary Rubadub crew since the age of 14, his labels Dress 2 Sweat and Wireblock have been pivotal in launching the careers of trailblazing producers such as Hudson Mohawke, Rustie, or Night Slugs’ L-Vis 1990. His main focus, Numbers, sees him at the forefront of new electronic music again. With releases from some of the finest names in post-dubstep, such as SBTRKT, Untold, and Deadboy, he keeps collecting accolades from forward thinking folks the world over. First and foremost though, Jackmaster is a DJ. A thoroughbred entertainer and impeccable selector, his sets range from bass to boogie, raw Chicago house to 80s wedding classics. No wonder he was just named "Best Breakthrough DJ" by DJ Mag.

Dexterously blending the best of bass music, Oneman has built a name by championing the pick of dark UK garage - that bypassed most people's ears first time round - with the cream of house and a smattering of dubstep. Quoted as wanting to make people dance and dance to good beats, Oneman succeeds with his slick mixing and ability to join the dots between the last fifteen years of the UK's hardcore continuum. Co-founder of Boiler Room resident night Standard Place, Oneman has 2-stepped his way onto a ridiculously long list of the top venues and club nights in the scene, including FWD>>, DMZ, and Night Slugs. In 2010 he founded his own imprint 502 Recordings, representing "new sounds born out of the collision of many modern forms of UK underground music".

Here is a recording of their hour long Carnival set, via the lovely guys at the RBMA: